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Nazism And Mast. Adesh naik Of Hitler
         By
            The Rise
Adolf Hitler(1889-1945)
• Born in 1889 in Austria.
• he was An Austrian-born German politician
  and the leader of the Nazi Party.
• He was chancellor of Germany from 1933 to
  1945 and dictator of Nazi Germany from 1934
  to 1945.
 Hitler's determination was to make Germany
  into a mighty power and his ambition was of
  conquering all of Europe.
World war I
 Germany fought the First World War (1914-1918) alongside the
  Austrian empire and against the Allies (England, France and
  Russia).
 All joined the war hoping to gain from a quick victory. Little did
  they realize that the war would stretch on, eventual draining
  of Europe and its resources.
 Germany made initial gains by occupying France and Belgium.
 the Allies, strengthened by the US entry in 1917, won , defeating
  Germany and the Central Powers in November 1918.
 The defeat of Imperial Germany and the abdication of the
  emperor gave an opportunity to parliamentary parties to
  recast German polity.
Birth of the Weimar Republic
       A National Assembly met at Weimar and
        established a democratic constitution
        with a federal structure.
       Deputies were now elected to the German
        Parliament or Reichstag, on the basis of
        equal and universal votes cast by all
        adults including women.
       This republic, however, was not received
        well by its own people largely because
        of the terms it was forced to accept
        after Germany's defeat at the end of
        the First World War.
THE TREATY OF PEACE(1919)
 The treaty of peace at Versailles with the Allies was
  a harsh and humiliating peace.
 Germany lost a tenth of its population, 13% of its
  territories, 75% of its iron and 26% of its coal to
  France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.
 The War Guilt Clause held Germany responsible for the
  war and damages the Allied countries suffered.
 Germany was forced to pay £6 billion(6 Billion Pounds).
  The Allied armies also occupied the resource-rich
  Rhineland.
 Germans held Weimar republic responsible for the
  defeat in the war and also disgrace at Versailles.
Europe after treaty of
      Versailles
World war i



Germany lost during world war i
Effects of world war I
 The war had a devastating impact on the entire continent both
  Psychologically and financially.
 The infant Weimar Republic was being made to pay for the sins of
  the old empire.
 The republic carried the burden of war guilt and national
  humiliation and was financially crippled by being forced to pay
  compensation.
 Those who supported the Weimar Republic, mainly Socialists,
  Catholics and Democrats, became easy targets of attack in the
  conservative Nationalist circles. They were mockingly called
  the .November criminals.
The First World War left a deep imprint on
 European society and polity. Soldiers came to be
 placed above civilians. Politicians and publicists
 laid great stress on the need for men to be
 aggressive, strong and masculine.
The soldiers lived miserable lives in thetrenches,
 trapped with Rats feeding on corpses. They faced
 poisonous gas and enemy shelling, and witnessed
 their ranks reduce rapidly.
Aggressive war propaganda and national honour
 occupied Centre stage in the public sphere, while
 popular support grew for conservative
 dictatorships that had recently come into being.
The years of depression
 German investments and industrial recoveries were totally
  dependent on short-term loans, largely from the USA. This
  support was withdrawn when the Wall Street Exchange crashed
  in 1929. Fearing a fall in prices, people made frantic efforts to
  sell their shares.
 on 24 October, 13 million shares were sold.
 This was the start of the Great Economic Depression.
 Over the next three years, between 1929 and 1932, the national
  income of the USA fell by half.
 Factories were shut down, exports fell, farmers were badly hit
  and speculators withdrew their money from the market.
 By 1932, industrial production was reduced to 40 per cent of the
  1929 level.
 Workers lost their jobs or were paid reduced wages. The
  number of unemployed touched an unprecedented 6 million.
 As jobs disappeared, the youth took to criminal activities
  and total despair became commonplace.
 The middle classes, especially salaried employees and
  pensioners, saw their savings diminish when the currency lost
  its value.
 Small businessmen, the self-employed and retailers suffered
  as their businesses got ruined.
 Only organized workers could manage to keep their heads
  above water, but unemployment weakened their bargaining
  power.
 The large mass of peasantry was affected by a sharp fall
  in agricultural prices and women, unable to fill their
  children’s stomachs, were filled with a sense of deep despair.
 Politically too the Weimar Republic was fragile. The
  Weimar constitution had some inherent defects, which
  made it unstable and vulnerable to dictatorship.
  One was proportional representation.
 This made achieving a majority by any one party a
  near impossible task, leading to a rule by coalitions.
 Article 48, which gave the President the powers to
  impose emergency, suspend civil rights and rule by
  decree.
 The Weimar Republic saw twenty different cabinets
  lasting on an average 239 days, and a liberal use of
  Article 48.
The world war IIAllies.
 In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the
  Anticipating what
 was coming, Hitler, his propaganda minister Goebbels
  and his entire
 family committed suicide collectively in his Berlin
  bunker in April.
 At the end of the war, an International Military
  Tribunal at
 Nuremberg was set up to prosecute Nazi war
  criminals for Crimes
 against Peace, for War Crimes and Crimes Against
 During 2nd World War, Germany had waged a genocidal
  war, which resulted in the mass murder of innocent
  civilians of Europe.
 6 million Jews, 200,000 Gypsies, 1 million Polish
  civilians, 70,000 Germans who were considered mentally
  and physically disabled, besides innumerable political
  opponents were killed.
 Nazis devised an unprecedented means of killing
  people, that is, by gassing them in various killing
  centre’s like Auschwitz.
 The Nuremberg Tribunal sentenced only eleven leading
  Nazis to death
 The Allies did not want to be as harsh on defeated
hitler’s rise to power
 This crisis in the economy, polity and society formed the
  background to hitler’s rise to power.
 When the First World War broke out, he enrolled for
  the army, acted as a messenger in the front, became a
  corporal, and earned medals for bravery.
 The German defeat horrified him and the Versailles
  Treaty made him furious.
 In 1919, he joined a small group called the German
  Workers Party.
 He subsequently took over the organization and
  renamed it the National Socialist German Workers
  Party. This party came to be known as the Nazi Party.
 In 1923, Hitler planned to seize control of Bavaria,
  march to Berlin and capture power. He failed, was
  arrested, tried for treason, and later released.
 The Nazis could not effectively mobilize popular
  support till the early 1930s. It was during the Great
  Depression that Nazism became a mass movement.
 After 1929, banks collapsed and businesses shut down,
  workers lost their jobs and the middle classes were
  threatened with destitution.
 Nazi propaganda stirred hopes of a better future, In
  1928, the Nazi Party got no more than 2. 6 per cent
  votes in the Reichstag, The German parliament.
 By 1932, it had become the largest party with37 per
  cent votes.
 Hitler was a powerful speaker. His passion and his
  words moved people. He promised to build a strong
  nation, undo the injustice of the Versailles Treaty
  and restore the dignity of the German people.
 He promised employment for those looking for work,
  and a secure future for the youth. He promised to
  weed out all foreign influences and resist all
  foreign .conspiracies. against Germany.
 Hitler devised a new style of politics. He understood
  the significance of rituals and spectacle in mass
  mobilization. Nazis held massive rallies and public
  meetings to demonstrate the support for Hitler and
  instill a sense of unity among the people.
 The Red banners with the Swastika, the Nazi
  salute, and the ritualised rounds of
  applause after the speeches were all part
  of this spectacle of power.
 Nazi propaganda skillfully projected Hitler
  as a messiah, a saviour, as someone who had
  arrived to deliver people from their
  distress.
 It is an image that captured the imagination
  of a people whose sense of dignity and pride
  had been shattered, and who were living in a
The Destruction of Democracy
 On 30 January 1933, President Hindenburg offered the
  Chancellorship, the highest position in the cabinet of ministers,
  to Hitler.
 By now the Nazis had managed to rally the conservatives to
  their cause. Having acquired power, Hitler set out to dismantle
  the structures of democratic rule.
 A mysterious fire that broke out in the German Parliament
  building in February facilitated his move.
 The Fire Decree of 28 February 1933 indefinitely suspended civic
  rights like freedom of speech, press and assembly that had
  been guaranteed by the Weimar constitution.
 Then he turned on his archenemies, the Communists, most of them
  were hurriedly packed off to the newly established
  concentration camps.
The repression of the Communists was severe. Out of
 the surviving 6,808 arrest files of Düsseldorf, a
 small city of half a million population, 1,440 were
 those of Communists alone. They were, however, only
 one among the 52 types of victims persecuted by the
 Nazis across the country.
On 3 March 1933, the famous Enabling Act was passed.
 This Act established dictatorship in Germany. It gave
 Hitler all powers to sideline Parliament and rule by
 decree.
All political parties and trade unions were banned
 except for the Nazi Party and its affiliates.
The state established complete control over the
 economy, media, army and judiciary.
 Special surveillance and security forces were created to
  control and order society in ways that the Nazis wanted.
 Apart from the already existing regular police in green
  uniform and the SA or the Storm Troopers, these included the
  Gestapo (secret state police), the SS (the protection
  squads), criminal police and the Security Service (SD).
 It was the extra-constitutional powers of these newly
  organised forces that gave the Nazi state its reputation as
  the most dreaded criminal state.
 People could now be detained in Gestapo torture
  chambers, rounded up and sent to concentration
  camps, deported at will or arrested without any legal
  procedures. The police forces acquired powers to rule with
  impunity.
Youth in Nazi Germany
Children were first segregated:-
Germans & Jews could not sit or play
 together
Jews and gypsies were thrown out of
 schools and finally in 1940’s they were
 taken to the gas chambers
• Hitler believed that boxing could make children
  iron-hearted, strong and masculine
• At 10 yrs. Of age they had to be sent to
  jungvolks
• At 14, they joined Nazi youth organisation-hitler
  youth where they learnt to worship war, glorify
  aggression and violence, condemn democracy,
  hate Jews and gypsies
• At 18, they had to serve in the armed forces and
  enter one of the Nazi organisation.
The Nazi youth league was founded in 1922 four
 years later it was renamed as Hitler Youth.
The Nazi cult of motherland
• Boys were taught to be
  aggressive, masculine and steal-hearted
  while girls were being prepared to become
  good mothers and they had to stay away
  from the Jews.
• In 1933 hitler assumed: “in my state mother is
  the most important citizen”.
• to encourage women’s to produce more
  children's Honour Crosses were awarded.
• A bronze was given for four children, silver
  for six and gold for eight and above.
The Death of Hitler
 In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the Allies.
 Anticipating what was coming, Adolf Hitler committed
  suicide by gunshot on 30 April 1945 in his Führerbunker in
  Berlin.
 His wife Eva committed suicide with him by ingesting
  cyanide.
 That afternoon, in accordance with Hitler's prior
  instructions, their remains were carried up the stairs
  through the bunker's emergency exit and burnt.
 The Soviet archives record that their burnt remains
  were recovered and interred in successive
  locations until 1970 when they were again exhumed,
  cremated and the ashes scattered.
Nazism And The Rise Of Hitler Final 2013 By Mast. Adesh Naik

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Nazism And The Rise Of Hitler Final 2013 By Mast. Adesh Naik

  • 1. History Project Nazism And Mast. Adesh naik Of Hitler By The Rise
  • 2. Adolf Hitler(1889-1945) • Born in 1889 in Austria. • he was An Austrian-born German politician and the leader of the Nazi Party. • He was chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945 and dictator of Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1945.  Hitler's determination was to make Germany into a mighty power and his ambition was of conquering all of Europe.
  • 3. World war I  Germany fought the First World War (1914-1918) alongside the Austrian empire and against the Allies (England, France and Russia).  All joined the war hoping to gain from a quick victory. Little did they realize that the war would stretch on, eventual draining of Europe and its resources.  Germany made initial gains by occupying France and Belgium.  the Allies, strengthened by the US entry in 1917, won , defeating Germany and the Central Powers in November 1918.  The defeat of Imperial Germany and the abdication of the emperor gave an opportunity to parliamentary parties to recast German polity.
  • 4. Birth of the Weimar Republic  A National Assembly met at Weimar and established a democratic constitution with a federal structure.  Deputies were now elected to the German Parliament or Reichstag, on the basis of equal and universal votes cast by all adults including women.  This republic, however, was not received well by its own people largely because of the terms it was forced to accept after Germany's defeat at the end of the First World War.
  • 5.
  • 6. THE TREATY OF PEACE(1919)  The treaty of peace at Versailles with the Allies was a harsh and humiliating peace.  Germany lost a tenth of its population, 13% of its territories, 75% of its iron and 26% of its coal to France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.  The War Guilt Clause held Germany responsible for the war and damages the Allied countries suffered.  Germany was forced to pay £6 billion(6 Billion Pounds). The Allied armies also occupied the resource-rich Rhineland.  Germans held Weimar republic responsible for the defeat in the war and also disgrace at Versailles.
  • 7. Europe after treaty of Versailles
  • 8. World war i Germany lost during world war i
  • 9. Effects of world war I  The war had a devastating impact on the entire continent both Psychologically and financially.  The infant Weimar Republic was being made to pay for the sins of the old empire.  The republic carried the burden of war guilt and national humiliation and was financially crippled by being forced to pay compensation.  Those who supported the Weimar Republic, mainly Socialists, Catholics and Democrats, became easy targets of attack in the conservative Nationalist circles. They were mockingly called the .November criminals.
  • 10. The First World War left a deep imprint on European society and polity. Soldiers came to be placed above civilians. Politicians and publicists laid great stress on the need for men to be aggressive, strong and masculine. The soldiers lived miserable lives in thetrenches, trapped with Rats feeding on corpses. They faced poisonous gas and enemy shelling, and witnessed their ranks reduce rapidly. Aggressive war propaganda and national honour occupied Centre stage in the public sphere, while popular support grew for conservative dictatorships that had recently come into being.
  • 11. The years of depression  German investments and industrial recoveries were totally dependent on short-term loans, largely from the USA. This support was withdrawn when the Wall Street Exchange crashed in 1929. Fearing a fall in prices, people made frantic efforts to sell their shares.  on 24 October, 13 million shares were sold.  This was the start of the Great Economic Depression.  Over the next three years, between 1929 and 1932, the national income of the USA fell by half.  Factories were shut down, exports fell, farmers were badly hit and speculators withdrew their money from the market.  By 1932, industrial production was reduced to 40 per cent of the 1929 level.
  • 12.  Workers lost their jobs or were paid reduced wages. The number of unemployed touched an unprecedented 6 million.  As jobs disappeared, the youth took to criminal activities and total despair became commonplace.  The middle classes, especially salaried employees and pensioners, saw their savings diminish when the currency lost its value.  Small businessmen, the self-employed and retailers suffered as their businesses got ruined.  Only organized workers could manage to keep their heads above water, but unemployment weakened their bargaining power.  The large mass of peasantry was affected by a sharp fall in agricultural prices and women, unable to fill their children’s stomachs, were filled with a sense of deep despair.
  • 13.  Politically too the Weimar Republic was fragile. The Weimar constitution had some inherent defects, which made it unstable and vulnerable to dictatorship. One was proportional representation.  This made achieving a majority by any one party a near impossible task, leading to a rule by coalitions.  Article 48, which gave the President the powers to impose emergency, suspend civil rights and rule by decree.  The Weimar Republic saw twenty different cabinets lasting on an average 239 days, and a liberal use of Article 48.
  • 14. The world war IIAllies.  In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the Anticipating what  was coming, Hitler, his propaganda minister Goebbels and his entire  family committed suicide collectively in his Berlin bunker in April.  At the end of the war, an International Military Tribunal at  Nuremberg was set up to prosecute Nazi war criminals for Crimes  against Peace, for War Crimes and Crimes Against
  • 15.  During 2nd World War, Germany had waged a genocidal war, which resulted in the mass murder of innocent civilians of Europe.  6 million Jews, 200,000 Gypsies, 1 million Polish civilians, 70,000 Germans who were considered mentally and physically disabled, besides innumerable political opponents were killed.  Nazis devised an unprecedented means of killing people, that is, by gassing them in various killing centre’s like Auschwitz.  The Nuremberg Tribunal sentenced only eleven leading Nazis to death  The Allies did not want to be as harsh on defeated
  • 16. hitler’s rise to power  This crisis in the economy, polity and society formed the background to hitler’s rise to power.  When the First World War broke out, he enrolled for the army, acted as a messenger in the front, became a corporal, and earned medals for bravery.  The German defeat horrified him and the Versailles Treaty made him furious.  In 1919, he joined a small group called the German Workers Party.  He subsequently took over the organization and renamed it the National Socialist German Workers Party. This party came to be known as the Nazi Party.
  • 17.  In 1923, Hitler planned to seize control of Bavaria, march to Berlin and capture power. He failed, was arrested, tried for treason, and later released.  The Nazis could not effectively mobilize popular support till the early 1930s. It was during the Great Depression that Nazism became a mass movement.  After 1929, banks collapsed and businesses shut down, workers lost their jobs and the middle classes were threatened with destitution.  Nazi propaganda stirred hopes of a better future, In 1928, the Nazi Party got no more than 2. 6 per cent votes in the Reichstag, The German parliament.  By 1932, it had become the largest party with37 per cent votes.
  • 18.  Hitler was a powerful speaker. His passion and his words moved people. He promised to build a strong nation, undo the injustice of the Versailles Treaty and restore the dignity of the German people.  He promised employment for those looking for work, and a secure future for the youth. He promised to weed out all foreign influences and resist all foreign .conspiracies. against Germany.  Hitler devised a new style of politics. He understood the significance of rituals and spectacle in mass mobilization. Nazis held massive rallies and public meetings to demonstrate the support for Hitler and instill a sense of unity among the people.
  • 19.
  • 20.  The Red banners with the Swastika, the Nazi salute, and the ritualised rounds of applause after the speeches were all part of this spectacle of power.  Nazi propaganda skillfully projected Hitler as a messiah, a saviour, as someone who had arrived to deliver people from their distress.  It is an image that captured the imagination of a people whose sense of dignity and pride had been shattered, and who were living in a
  • 21. The Destruction of Democracy  On 30 January 1933, President Hindenburg offered the Chancellorship, the highest position in the cabinet of ministers, to Hitler.  By now the Nazis had managed to rally the conservatives to their cause. Having acquired power, Hitler set out to dismantle the structures of democratic rule.  A mysterious fire that broke out in the German Parliament building in February facilitated his move.  The Fire Decree of 28 February 1933 indefinitely suspended civic rights like freedom of speech, press and assembly that had been guaranteed by the Weimar constitution.  Then he turned on his archenemies, the Communists, most of them were hurriedly packed off to the newly established concentration camps.
  • 22. The repression of the Communists was severe. Out of the surviving 6,808 arrest files of Düsseldorf, a small city of half a million population, 1,440 were those of Communists alone. They were, however, only one among the 52 types of victims persecuted by the Nazis across the country. On 3 March 1933, the famous Enabling Act was passed. This Act established dictatorship in Germany. It gave Hitler all powers to sideline Parliament and rule by decree. All political parties and trade unions were banned except for the Nazi Party and its affiliates. The state established complete control over the economy, media, army and judiciary.
  • 23.  Special surveillance and security forces were created to control and order society in ways that the Nazis wanted.  Apart from the already existing regular police in green uniform and the SA or the Storm Troopers, these included the Gestapo (secret state police), the SS (the protection squads), criminal police and the Security Service (SD).  It was the extra-constitutional powers of these newly organised forces that gave the Nazi state its reputation as the most dreaded criminal state.  People could now be detained in Gestapo torture chambers, rounded up and sent to concentration camps, deported at will or arrested without any legal procedures. The police forces acquired powers to rule with impunity.
  • 24. Youth in Nazi Germany Children were first segregated:- Germans & Jews could not sit or play together Jews and gypsies were thrown out of schools and finally in 1940’s they were taken to the gas chambers
  • 25. • Hitler believed that boxing could make children iron-hearted, strong and masculine • At 10 yrs. Of age they had to be sent to jungvolks • At 14, they joined Nazi youth organisation-hitler youth where they learnt to worship war, glorify aggression and violence, condemn democracy, hate Jews and gypsies • At 18, they had to serve in the armed forces and enter one of the Nazi organisation.
  • 26. The Nazi youth league was founded in 1922 four years later it was renamed as Hitler Youth.
  • 27. The Nazi cult of motherland
  • 28. • Boys were taught to be aggressive, masculine and steal-hearted while girls were being prepared to become good mothers and they had to stay away from the Jews. • In 1933 hitler assumed: “in my state mother is the most important citizen”. • to encourage women’s to produce more children's Honour Crosses were awarded. • A bronze was given for four children, silver for six and gold for eight and above.
  • 29. The Death of Hitler  In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the Allies.  Anticipating what was coming, Adolf Hitler committed suicide by gunshot on 30 April 1945 in his Führerbunker in Berlin.  His wife Eva committed suicide with him by ingesting cyanide.  That afternoon, in accordance with Hitler's prior instructions, their remains were carried up the stairs through the bunker's emergency exit and burnt.  The Soviet archives record that their burnt remains were recovered and interred in successive locations until 1970 when they were again exhumed, cremated and the ashes scattered.